New desktop environments ([[GNOME]], [[KDE]], and maybe even [[Xfce]]) support their own osd notifications for important events (volume up/down/mute and brightness up/down), which might be enough for most users. In order to use those notifications instead of the ones provided by TPB, map the keyboard-events of those keys to the proper keycodes.

New desktop environments ([[GNOME]], [[KDE]], and maybe even [[Xfce]]) support their own osd notifications for important events (volume up/down/mute and brightness up/down), which might be enough for most users. In order to use those notifications instead of the ones provided by TPB, map the keyboard-events of those keys to the proper keycodes.

Line 12:

Line 9:

* (udev 181-2) create /etc/udev/rules.d/tpb.rules:

* (udev 181-2) create /etc/udev/rules.d/tpb.rules:

KERNEL=="nvram", GROUP="audio", MODE="0640"

KERNEL=="nvram", GROUP="audio", MODE="0640"

−

* (udev 119-1) Edit /etc/udev/rules.d/51-arch.rules (WARNING: It will be overwritten with new udev update!)

* (udev 119-1) Edit /etc/udev/rules.d/51-arch.rules (WARNING: It will be overwritten with new udev update!)

Revision as of 06:14, 20 February 2013

New desktop environments (GNOME, KDE, and maybe even Xfce) support their own osd notifications for important events (volume up/down/mute and brightness up/down), which might be enough for most users. In order to use those notifications instead of the ones provided by TPB, map the keyboard-events of those keys to the proper keycodes.